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Legitimate vs illegitimate: the luxury supply chain and its doppelganger

Iolanda D'Amato (SDA Bocconi School of Management, Operations and Technology Management, Milan, Italy)
Thanos Papadimitriou (SDA Bocconi School of Management, Operations and Technology Management, Milan, Italy)

International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management

ISSN: 0959-0552

Article publication date: 15 November 2013

3055

Abstract

Purpose

The increase in international trade, the advances in technology, the growing importance of the emerging markets are the main factors that have contributed to the explosion of counterfeiting experienced in recent years, estimated to be valued at about 5-7 per cent of the world trade. The luxury industry in Italy has been particularly hard hit and most brands nowadays are urgently looking for demand-side and supply-side strategies to track and control the phenomenon. The aim of this paper is to provide a supply chain view of counterfeiting and illegitimate trade phenomena, in a supply chain risk management perspective, to define and illuminate the interaction of the legitimate and the illegitimate supply chains.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper introduces the LISC model to represent and include all the illegitimate trade phenomena under analysis such as pure counterfeiting, factory overruns, grey and parallel market, supply chain infiltrations, product diversion and sale of stolen goods

Findings

The interrelations between legitimate and illegitimate supply chains are crucial to approach counterfeiting issue and define which illegitimate trade paths are more harmful to companies and customers.

Research limitations/implications

The first limitation of the work is that the illegitimate trade categories defined in this paper mainly rely on data and phenomena collected from secondary sources that have not yet been directly observed by the authors. The second one is that a specific focus on high-end fashion industry was employed throughout this work: further analysis for evaluating the applicability and the significance of the illegitimate trade in other industries is still pending. The final limitation stems from the fact that it will be necessary to investigate the implications and the applicability of the model to the illegitimate on-line trade.

Practical implications

During the course of the MI-FIDO project, the model and the selection rules identified for illegitimate trade family classification were used as a basis for defining the rules for anomalies detection to be included in a “track and trace” system developed the project team currently under with a major Italian fashion brand.

Originality/value

To the authors ' knowledge, this is the first work that attempts to present a concise and systematic approach to luxury illegitimate trade from a supply chain perspective. Understanding which legitimate-illegitimate supply chain interactions are the most damaging will help fashion luxury and other industries to battle the counterfeiting phenomenon more effectively

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research effort was partly funded the by MI-FIDO (Made-in-Italy Fashion IDentity and Originality) initiative. The authors would like to thank Prof. Enzo Baglieri for his support and feedback that made this work possible.

Citation

D'Amato, I. and Papadimitriou, T. (2013), "Legitimate vs illegitimate: the luxury supply chain and its doppelganger", International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management, Vol. 41 No. 11/12, pp. 986-1007. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJRDM-01-2013-0015

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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